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		In UK lawsuit, Hollywood star Eva Green says making 'B movie' would ruin 
		career
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		 [January 31, 2023] 
		(Please note strong language in paragraphs 9 and 11) 
 By Michael Holden
 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Hollywood actress Eva Green, who is suing financiers 
		for her fee for a failed film in which she was to star, told a London 
		court on Monday she would not make a career-ending "B movie" that she 
		said was cutting corners in stunt safety and crew pay.
 
 The French actress, whose film credits include the James Bond movie 
		"Casino Royale", is suing White Lantern Films and SMC Speciality Finance 
		for the $1 million fee she says is owed over the collapse of the planned 
		independent movie "A Patriot", in which she was to play the lead role as 
		a soldier.
 
 The production company has launched a counter claim against Green for 
		breach of contract, blaming her for the science fiction film's failure 
		before it went into production in late 2019, saying she never intended 
		for it to go ahead.
 
		
		 
		Giving evidence at the High Court in London, Green, 42, said she had 
		become concerned the film's production team had been cutting corners, 
		citing how her stunt training had been reduced from four weeks to five 
		days.
 This was "extremely dangerous for action films" she said, and referenced 
		the fatal 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins for which 
		actor Alec Baldwin is facing a charge of involuntary manslaughter.
 
 "You look at what happened with Alec Baldwin on the movie 'Rust', the 
		producers cutting corners, no safety measures and a young woman got 
		killed," she told the court.
 
 Baldwin has denied responsibility for the shooting, saying live 
		ammunition should never have been allowed on set and weapons handlers 
		were responsible for firearm safety.
 
 'UNREASONABLE'
 
 In its written submissions, White Lantern's lawyers said Green, also an 
		executive producer in the project, had made unreasonable demands about 
		crew, locations and equipment.
 
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            French actress Eva Green arrives at The 
			Rolls Building courthouse in London, Britain, January 30, 2023. 
			REUTERS/Henry Nicholls TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY 
            
			 They cited WhatsApp messages from 
			Green in which she described one producer as a "fucking moron" who 
			should be fired and another as "evil". She also described funders 
			for the movie as "arseholes" and some proposed crew members as 
			"shitty peasants". 
 "I wanted to make the most brilliant film possible," Green told the 
			court, agreeing with White Lantern's lawyer Max Mallin that making a 
			"B movie" could kill her career.
 
 Asked by Mallin if the director had approached her to make a "B 
			shitty movie" - a reference to a text message she had sent about the 
			film - for $1 million, she said she would not.
 
 Green, whose lawyers say has never breached a contract or missed a 
			day's shooting in her 20 year career, said she could have ensured a 
			quality film by getting a strong core crew but the producers had not 
			wanted to pay standard industry rates.
 
 "I didn’t want to work with a substandard crew. I wanted to work 
			with a high-quality crew who just wanted to be paid standard 
			industry rates," Green told the court.
 
 Green said the script for "A Patriot" had been one of the best she 
			had read and she had fallen in love with the story: "It was about 
			climate change, it was very dear to my heart."
 
 The trial, which will conclude next week, will determine liability 
			with any award settled at a later date.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Christina Fincher and 
			Alison Williams)
 
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